Mangayarkarasi

Mangayarkarasi
Directed by Jitten Bannerjee
Produced by F. Nagoor
S. N. Ahamed
Screenplay by Suratha
Story by Kambadasan
Based on A folk tale
Starring P. U. Chinnappa
Anjali Devi
N. S. Krishnan
P. Kannamba
T. A. Mathuram
Music by G. Ramanathan
Kunnakkudi Venkatrama Iyer
C. R. Subburaman
Cinematography P. S. Selvaraj
Edited by V. B. Nataraja Mudaliar
Production
company
Bhagya Pictures
Release date
  • 3 September 1949 (1949-09-03) (India)
[1]
Running time
172 mins. (15495 ft.)
Country India
Language Tamil

Mangayarkarasi (English: Queen of women) is a 1949 Indian, Tamil-language film directed by Jiten Bannerjee.[2] The film was produced by F. Nagoor and S. N. Ahamed. Executive Producer R. Subbiya Naidu and featured P. U. Chinnappa and Anjali Devi in the lead roles.[3]

Plot

A heavenly seductress takes away the crown prince from his kingdom to her heavenly abode. The wife of the prince is helped by an angel and goes to her husband's abode. They spend the night together. She returns to Earth and finds that she has become pregnant. She is accused of being intimate with the court poet by the King and others. She leaves the palace and goes to live with some tribal people. She delivers a child. The King rescues the child and brings him up. The child grows into a young man. Due to a strange situation the young man wants to have a relationship with his mother without knowing who she is. However, the heavenly woman brings back her husband in time and explains everything so that all ends well.[4]

Cast and Crew

The lists are compiled from the database of Film News Anandan[1], The Hindu review article,[4] and from the film credits (see External links).

Cast

  • P. U. Chinnappa as Madhuranthakan, Kaantharuban, Sudhaman
  • P. Kannamba as Mangayarkarasi
  • Anjali Devi as Sasikala
  • N. S. Krishnan as Parthiban, Jeevamrudham
  • T. A. Mathuram as Mohana
  • Kaka Radhakrishnan as Young Jeevamrudham
  • T. S. Durairaj as Parthiban's friend
  • Kambadasan as Kavi Vidyapathi (Court poet)
  • Pudukottai Seenu as Panchavarnam
  • P. A. Kumar as Chief Minister
  • P. V. Angaiah as Minister
  • Durai Pandian as Parthiban's friend
  • C. Vallinayagam as Hunter
  • Thirupathi as Poojari
  • Saradambal as Dasi Vanchi
  • D. S. Krishnaveni as Vasanthavathi
  • T. A. Kantham as Maya
  • Seetha, M. N. Rajam, Padma, Pattammal, Lalitha, Vathsala and Navaneetham as heavenly maidens
Dance

Crew

  • Producers: F. Nagoor and S. N. Ahamed
  • Executive Producer: R. Subbiya Naidu
  • Director: Jiten Bannerjee
  • Story: Kambadasan
  • Dialogues: Suratha
  • Cinematography: Jiten Bannerjee
  • Operative Cameraman: P. S. Selvaraj
  • Audiography: Dinsha K. Tehrani
  • Audio Recording: M. Loganathan
  • Editing: V. B. Nataraja Mudaliar
  • Art: F. Nagoor
  • Choreography: V. Ragavaiah

TT

Production

The film featured P. U. Chinnappa in triple roles - King, Prince and the grandson. It was the first time in Tamil cinema that an artiste featured in 3 roles. N. S. Krishnan featured in double roles as father and son. Radhakrishnan played the role of N. S. Krishnan's kid and literally caught a crow in one scene. Thereafter he came to be fondly called as Kaka Radhakrishnan, Kaka in Tamil meaning crow.[4]

The knife dance performed by Lalitha and Padmini was a thriller. The film was shot at Newtone Studios, Madras

Soundtrack

Music was composed by G. Ramanathan, Kunnakkudi Venkatrama Iyer and C. R. Subburaman while the lyrics were penned by Kambadasan, Lakshmanadas and Ku. Sa. Krishnamurthi (film credits). Most of the tunes were set in Carnatic music ragas and were rendered by P. U. Chinnappa became popular. The song Kaadhal Kanirasame set in the raga Chittharanjani, was a hit. It was composed using the same metre, melody and tune of the well-known composition Naatha thanumanisum Sankaram… made famous by Madurai Mani Iyer.[4]

Reception

The film fared well at the box office. Film historian Randor Guy wrote in 2008 that the film is "remembered for: Triple role played by Chinnappa, double role by NSK, pleasing music and Kannamba’s performance."[4]

References

  1. 1 2 Film News Anandan (23 October 2004). Sadhanaigal Padaitha Thamizh Thiraipada Varalaru [History of Landmark Tamil Films] (in Tamil). Chennai: Sivakami Publishers. Archived from the original on 25 May 2017.
  2. Ashish Rajadhyaksha & Paul Willemen. Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema (PDF). Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1998. p. 614.
  3. Mangayarkarasi (1949 - Tamil)
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Guy, Randor (4 April 2008). "Mangayarkarasi 1949". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 25 May 2017. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
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